Research Foundation of SUNY - University of Buffalo Department of Family Medicine
Research Foundation of SUNY - University of Buffalo Department of Family Medicine
Grant Status
Completed
Project Title
Addressing Cultural & Linguistic Barriers to Facilitated Enrollment
Award Amount
$50,000
Location
Amherst
Website
Date Awarded
November 15, 2007
Buffalo’s West Side is a community in great need with a majority of low-income residents, a large Hispanic population (30%), and growing numbers of refugees from Somalia, Sudan, Vietnam, Burma, Ethiopia, Liberia, the former Soviet Union, and the Middle East. More than 4,000 people in the community are uninsured. With the help of student volunteers, this project will work on enrolling these residents in insurance programs for which they are eligible.
This project will reach many of those individuals by translating existing insurance enrollment materials into more than five languages (including Somali and Somali Bantu, Sudanese, Burmese, Vietnamese, and Rwandese/Burundi), and assigning medical students to and assist facilitated enrollers in serving these populations. Students from the University of Buffalo Medical School will be trained to use the translated materials, and will receive overall training on cultural competency. The student volunteers will work biweekly at two safety net providers (the Jericho Road Family Practice and Mattina Health Center), which serve as the main sites of care for the West Side and its immigrant/refugee residents. A similar medical student outreach program was very successful in reaching low-income African Americans in Buffalo’s East Side. This program will create a series of forms and materials that could be used by other communities, and could assist in developing cultural competency among future health professionals. The project aims to have a direct impact on more than 400 uninsured families with limited English proficiency, including more than 1,000 individuals.
Grant Update
Click here to access the tool kit developed under this grant including guides to public and private health insurance in Arabic, Burmese, English, Karen, Vietnamese and Somali.


